Hey guys, I trimmed out the Blackmore solo part because it was too long. Please check out the Blackmore part here - ruclips.net/video/BIOeFTBQPHk/видео.html 🎸🎸🎸!!!
Ummm no. That’s not Ritchie trying to do Eddie. Blackmore had plenty of moments that were clearly inspirational to Eddie, if not blueprint for him. The YFNO solo from Live in London, the feedback segment on Space Truckin’ from Made In Japan…. no, Blackmore is doing Blackmore there. That this moment is not the best he’s ever done, well…. it goes that way sometimes when you take a real risk improvising every night you take the stage. In retro, one can clearly see where Eruption would not even exist if it weren’t for Ritchie getting up in front of 300,000 people at CalJam and setting the mold.
It’s too bad Randy said himself that he finds himself playing Van Halen all the time. And wishes he could have found his own style of playing. This is out of the horses mouth.
@@SMARTS_YT pulling out of the horses mouth so to speak, tell it like he really said it, its flash and copy licks for his solo piece! not anything musical or songwriting wise. you are welcome.
@SMARTS_YT Hey, you ever hear of that riff from a little song called crazy train? You know, that one that plays at EVERY sporting event? That one song that didn't have a vaudeville hack squeaking over it every damn second they could???? Eddie was genius, sure, but if you are going to come on forums and not respect or hear the genius in Randy Rhoads, you might not want to work an iron when it's hot or pick up a pot from a hot flame, cause you are clearly lacking common sense and will defintly hurt yourself walking around without that level of intelligence. Lol
But Eddie did Panama or jump. Stack that up to Crazy Train alone and randy wins hands down as the lasting legend. Evh always was the typist with no soul
The Gem in here is the Randy video!! I’ve never seen this so rare. You can see just how different of a player he is. He’s another level he was so fluid in his runs. Truly a master already and so young here! Badassery!
@@moltenhavoc3736 There are 5 different videos in this clip...they are individually labeled... Last 3 are Eddie...the 1st 2 are Angus & then Randy. Big clue...if it's wearing polka dots it's most likely Randy...that was his signature outfit.
I met Eddie in 1991 and he was in rehab at Saint Joe’s. Hung out with him a few times in meetings. Smoked a few cigarettes with him in the back. Give him a book when he got his 30 day chip. He remembered me. When I was at a meeting, he walked up and said hey Steve, how are you. I couldn’t believe it. I guess it was my 15 minutes. I wish I could’ve helped him stay sober. He finally got sober for Wolfie. I miss you my friend. Thanks for the memory.
Wasn’t that the same yr Wolfie was born… I wondering if he might have been doing out pt therapy .. I only say this because Valerie has made no mention that Ed went into therapy that yr because Ed was the one who would get up through the night with Wolfie to feed and change him..
I was going to bring that up thanks. Randy and Eddie were in the same circles and both went to craft their own individual sound. They are similar because that’s what was going on at the time.
@@edward9884 he also admitted in an interview it bothered him that he does a lot of what Eddie does, because that's what the kids (fans) like. He said he wanted to come up with something more original but it was gonna take time. He finished by saying "Eddie is great though, I don't want to be near competing with someone like that"
I heard that Randy never stopped taking lessons even when on tour and already a rock god. So the opposite - guitarists are in awe of his humility and willingness to learn. It's a big lesson / example. In contrast... there is a video around on YT where George Harrison actually says [paraphrased] "I could have been quite good but Ringo and I didn't practice that much between Tours and records".
And the way he played skipping strings at an insane pace. He did some crazy stuff on guitar.Go learn the riff to hot for teacher and play UT like evh did.
Yeah, he sounded like he was playing to a drummer in his head even when his brother wasn’t playing. The way he would speed up and slow down like it was all rehearsed, effortless and smooth.
Randy had absolutely crisp notes at massive speeds, he is unlike any guitar player. Combine this with a vast knowledge of music theory, his compositions were unique.
Only through Ozzy's guidance. Quiet Riot sucked. They were flops until they capitalized on Randy's name. Who knows the next lps he made could have flopped? He was far from done. I thought Jake E Lee was a better player, and is under rated. He had to play clone riffs for Ozzy and managed to squeeze him self in there. Absolute professional. Eddie was the first "mainstream" shredder. Based his riffs an awful lot on Jimmy Pages stuff. Most of the greatest are someone else on steroids. They take other ideas to extremes. Imo
@@andrewruiz7894 I'm a great fan of Jake E Lee, but he is different to Randy and had the opportunity to build on what Randy achieved. No one beats Randy when it comes to innovating Rock harmonies (chord progressions) at his time, revelation mother earth, suicide solution, believer. These are not standard 1-4-5 progressions. They are entirely different, that's why they sound different. He grew up in a music school and could take classical harmonies and translate them to heavy rock. Ozzy, even if sober, would not of had a clue, much like the rest of us!!! This is a guy who at the height of success was set on dropping rock and doing a Degree in music!!! No one does that.
I guess you never heard of Al Di Meola in the seventies. Pull him up on RUclips between 1976Race with Devil on Spanish Highway live you’ll see him playing a sunburst Les Paul it’s about 9:20 long Wanna talk about clarity.
Eddie sounded natural. Like a drunk rolling down the stairs and then rolling into a standing position and shouting ”ta-da”. He managed to connect all the clever techniques together in a fluid natural sounding way.
He got a lot from Jimi Hendrix and Jimmy Page. He took it further into his own, but a lot of his moves and locks are straight out of the Jimi and Jimmys playbooks.
Год назад+104
I can't imagine what would be Randy Rhoads in our days... Simply AMAZING
I think he just died too early. Had still a lot to give. Yep. But pretending 40 years of continuous artistic mastery is a huge stretch. These guys weren't fucking invincible!!
from what i have read / heard he was going to give up playing with ozzy and concentrate on the classic side / teaching. definatly died way to young tho :(
I love how Randy still sounded completely unique. I wish we could've seen what it would've looked like between him and Eddie had he lived. The eighties would've been even crazier.
I saw VH on their World Invasion ('Women & Children First") tour at Hammersmith Odeon in 1980, & Blizzard Of Oz at Port Vale football ground, 1981 - both EVH & Rhoads had their own unique styles, so to make comparison, is futile. For my money, Rhoads had the edge - but that's a personal opinion.
Mad respect to EVH - one of a kind virtuoso with his own unique Frankenstein of a style. But - I also hear and see a 22/23 year old Randy Rhoads with a style and brilliant creativity all his own. THANK YOU, and RIP to both. ❤️
Angus was playing that at least as early as 1977 (a year before VH1) as part of the Let There Be Rock solo. He definitely wasn't influenced by Eddie. Facts.
Indeed. It's the other way around. Eddie was a great admirer of Angus. You can hear this clearly in his way of playing, he just made it his own by using a lot more finger tapping and of course the whammy bar. Eddy never made a secret of that either. He loved AC/DC!
You guys are all wrong. Angus is next to Brian Johnson in that clip, who joined the band after Bon Scott died in 1980. Eddie Van Halen's eruption came out in 1978 and it's not a coincidence that Angus is playing many of the same notes as Eruption in the clip. Angus was indeed (just for fun obviously), doing an Eddie Van Halen impression in that video.
@@rasheedali77 You guys are all wrong. Angus is next to Brian Johnson in that clip, who joined the band after Bon Scott died in 1980. Eddie Van Halen's eruption came out in 1978 and it's not a coincidence that Angus is playing many of the same notes as Eruption in the clip. Angus was indeed (just for fun obviously), doing an Eddie Van Halen impression in that video.
When Van Halen came out back in the day I bought the album. Learned how to play Eruption but also learned I was no Eddie Van Halen. Same thing Randy Rhodes, SRV, and so many others. One day I had an epiphany. Just play your own music, be a musician and entertain. “If I can’t be my own I’d be better dead.” Layne Staley
Yes. I love Eddie Van Halen's sound. For me, he was the best, but best is in the ear of the hearer, we all aren't going to like the same things. Just because EVH appeals to me more, doesn't mean I don't recognize other great guitarists and don't thoroughly enjoy what others CREATED. Just be you and write good music that you enjoy playing.
Uli Roth also used classical arpeggios and modes in his solos, but that was in 1975/76/77, so Blackmore was first. And Jan Akkerman from Focus also used similar guitar techniques.
@@AndyNyleHendrix, Cobain taught everyone to play and smash, burn their guitars. EVH taught everyone to play and rebuild their own customized guitars😂 I liked all of them.
@@markusantonio4866 it’s harder to break something that you build. But I am sure Eddy smashed plenty of guitars in private when they were not up to his standards
@@asegal4677 Except Eddie stole fast blues licks from Clapton and 2 hand tapping from an Italian Classical Guitarist....so I guess Eddie was a wannabe as well?
@@algrundau9441 Granted that nobody is devoid of influences, however Eddie doesn't sound like either Clapton or some Italian classical guitarist. By contrast, Randy here sounds like Eddie. Eddie has a distinctive style, both easily recognizable and extremely influential at that time -- so this seems not to be a fluke; it's likely just a copy and an inferior one.
Am I the only one that didn't see Ritchie???? Was looking forward to it but . . . Great performers none the less! Hats off to obtaining this treasure of truly priceless footage. ROCK ON!!!
Thanks Joe for checking out, great pleasure! I had to trim out that Blackmore part. Please check out the link in my comment below the video. The thing is that even Blackmore got influenced after Eruption. This is why he dropped his Ranbow project and reformed Deep Purple in 1984. In his 1984's interviews, Blackmore says that he admires AC/DC and Van Halen.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 He dropped Rainbow and reformed Deep Purple because they offered him a massive wad of cash and he had to fund his divorce. Ritchie could be amazing live and also could be completely awful live (mostly in the 80s), never matching EVH's accuracy. But he was first with a lot of this stuff.
Hendrix died in 1970, Eddie was 15 in 1970, Van Halen formed in 1973. It took them 5 years to get signed. All the stuff on the first two albums was already writen and and being performed by release of the first album. So close as almost contemporary. But for the fact Jimi would never get the chance to hear Eddie.
I just remember as a 14 year old in 1981 walking around town (Lodi Nj) with my buddy it seemed like every other garage or basement had a band. Including ours. Being a guitar player the conversation between guitar players was Eddie or Randy. It's a shame we only had 2 years of that magical moment. I was a Randy guy but don't deny Eddie's innovative everything. Randy just clicked with me more
it is basically a coin toss and personal preference, but the issue is EVH apologists seem to need to let everyone know how Ed invented everything......it's weird. The two guys grew up in the same area of LA, knew each other, but neither sounded like the other. George Lynch was also part of the holy trinity of LA guitar players, but he definitely tried to sound like Ed with the first Xciter album
@@jmm1817 Plus synth and piano. He wrote stuff no one ever even heard or sounded like before. We take it for granted now but all of those little easter eggs he did on every album. Usually one instrumental masterpiece per album for most of his career. Even now i remember vividly as a little kid that 1984 album. It was groundbreaking synth stuff never heard before or since. He wasn't just a great guitar player he could play every instrument. One of the greatest musicians of all time for sure. He wrote so many hit songs.
@@judyteague4212 never and why would you say that if you don't agree that Eddie Van Halen was Miles Ahead of Randy you are the Clueless one puffing on the pipe
Ed's guitar riffs and rhythm work is what I admired about him the most. After he changed electric guitar as we knew it in the 70s, so many others came and ran off with it. Ed stayed in VH and wrote monster rock songs which still stand up. All of Randy's work on those Ozzy albums too. Timeless both of them!
No one is even close to him , he's only "problem" is lack of popularity . 😊 And there's evidential proof to that - DP, Rainbow and all the great musicians he found, build and set free to stardome
Ritchie has played some of the most beautiful guitar solos in history and written some of the most unique songs. That's the essence of being a musician. Not the tappings and the whammy bars and whatever. Maybe EVH should have tried to play like Blackmore, which I am pretty sure that he tried when he started learning...
They all played a mean guitar, but Eddie was a mad scientist that played a mean guitar. RIP Eddie and Randy. I hope you're both jamming with Jimi and Bon
EVH changed the landscape of electric guitar for everyone. You can hear it in the tone alone...it was a gold standard other contemporary players reached for, along with his techniques....
@@automatoncollectives7237 does not matter, how is that relevant to his playing or what he wrote. That is just a such weird viewpoint....I would say a band that owes a label 2 million dollars after recording and touring is the epitome of a doormat, and they had no recourse. You realize you are insulting Van halen far worse with your angle? they were millions in debt that is a horrible situation to be in. And you are actually wrong as a hired hand, Randy was offered a management fee schedule as a band member. Randy was clearly cop-joined with ozzy as the guys in the band at the time of his death,.
@Archangel0804 no one said two guitarists are the same, they absolutely can be compared they play guitar. Any two people can be compared and contrasted. I know Darth hideous fumbled with no video footage or being ready to ball by August 1981, she should have pro footage or videos taken to promote Diary of a madman.
@Dave Wight Dave....As a player of over 30 years, you are dead wrong. No two guitarists are ever the same, and therefore shouldn't be compared in the manner presented here. OF COURSE EVH is the master of HIS OWN LICK.... I would expect that!! All of these guitarists are awesome in their own way. Everyone develops their own style, and every player is the sum of their influences with some amount of deviation. If someone gave Randy some good film footage of Eddie playing Eruption way back in the late 70's and early 80's, I guarantee Randy could play it EXACTLY. Randy was a FAR better player than I am, yet I can play Eruption just as well as Wolfgang VanHalen who pretty much has mastered his father's rendition. It's less difficult than it looks. For that matter, There are freaking 10 and 12 yr olds here on RUclips that can play Eruption pretty well! ruclips.net/video/kcfqZphAMYw/видео.html People forget that Randy died in March of 1982. RUclips didn't exist, and MTV was just getting started. So that left you with a concert to view a performance and no one had a cell phone to record the performance either. There also wasn't exactly any readily available film to study of someone else's work. And that was the case here.
It's so great when video like this surfaces and we get a glimpse of these guys in their prime. And what a shame that nobody thought to film every show. Thank you whoever posted this!!
I will say it a million times, and mean it everytime Being a guitarist myself, I know what EVH was to me. Everyone else here knows what he meant to them. You can throw out all the superlatives you want about The Master, but there is never going to be an argument about his mastery of his chosen art. No else had players around the planet going "What the F is that". From his grin to his fingers Eddie was born to bring us joy through his expression of his art, and you can thank whatever god you believe in that he shared his joy with us. ALWAYS #1 UNPARALLELED. When the master emerged, from the opening chords of you really got me, every player knew the sonic landscape was changed in a way that was unheard of up to that time. Eruption smashed his foot onto your throat daring you to try to emulate him. No one can. do you know why? You cant be Eddie because you don't think like Eddie. There was never anyone like him, and there will never be another.
Agree evh is my all time biggest influence and favorite guitarist but to say that no other guitar player had other guitar players around the world going what is that sells Hendrix's influence short. Cuz he def had that impact as well. Whether you like him or not.
Eddie wondered wtf jeff beck was doing. He's even said so. He was like a star struck kid in Jeffs presence. Eddie was brilliant and sure lit it up for a few years. Beck is the goat
@@waitwhat9689 agreed. Even if you just stopped at tone, no one else could touch EVH...but when you add Eruption, Spanish Fly, Women in Love, Cathedral, Mean Street and essentially designing the modern Superstrat...EVH was the major game-changer for everyone in that period and after.
Glen Buxton from Alice Cooper, the original band. Mountain Guitarist Leslie West was the other. I would say West was probably the most influential of the three on Randy's playing. I never really got people saying EVH was. Apparently, the two didn't care much for one another with Eddie's photo apparently taped onto Randy's effects pedal. 🤣
Finger tapping was huge in the 80s because of EVH. Lots of players did it. That dude from Night Ranger did it with 8 fingers which was mind blowing at the time for us young guitar players.
Randy is truly impressive in this clip. While Eddie's tapping was instantly a thing then, Randy was seriously into classical guitar music and his soling lines amply reflect that. Hats off to both Edward and Randy. Rock got a swift kick in the nuts when it needed one. Regarding Ritchie, he was a pioneer in heavy rock. He made a lot of noise in Made In Japan but man it was such amazing noise. The clip shown here is also noise making but he must be taking the piss. AC/DC is simply great. As for Edward, he's the Mozart of 20th century rock guitar.
ya but Randy had been doing that solo for years.... Randy was a more diverse player. But the real issue is Randy never cited Ed as a favorite that is a lie or ignorance.
@@Dave_Wight_The_Rock_Oracle Sorry Dave, not true. Max Norman (who worked with Ozzy on their first album) said Randy told him this: "Van Halen was one of the few guitarists Randy would talk about. One day I asked him, 'What guitar players do you like, Randy?' And he said, 'I like Eddie Van Halen.' I had never seen Eddie play, so when Randy started doing all that finger tapping stuff, it was all new to me. But Randy didn't cop Eddie's licks, he just picked up on some of his ideas and methods of playing. It's only natural to get something from someone else - all guitarists do it."
@@karsguitarchannel6088 Find me the interview if you are pulling quotes from message boards, many of those are made up, they want to see what suckers they can find.
I appreciate them both for what they gave. Eddie was about 5 yrs Randy's senior, in the guitar playing world. He still rained Supreme in record sales and I'm sure still does.
Randy Rhoads was a contemporary of Eddie van Halen and what's more they were both from LA so they influenced each other. Both stellar but these days I'm more drawn to RR, his playing had more finessse and subtle nuances not to mention his humbleness and shyness was very reminiscent of Hendrix.
@@kevinstewart1898 Randy won MTV's Best New Talent in 1981. I believe he may have won the same sort of award for best new talent for Guitar World, but i could be mistaken.
I say this with massive respect for EVH: Randy’s speed and precision are on a different level. Had his life not been cut short, and he continued with the same intensity and desire to learn, …. What could he have been?
@@charlesdjones1 that is, ultimately, my humble yet subjective opinion. I know I am in the minority here. Lol. I have listened to both - and many others - closely for many years. I can’t explain it, but there is some element of Randy’s playing that grabs my soul. Interestingly, I find that Eddie’s son strikes me in a similar manner. But happy to cling to the contrarian view…
Though I'm a big fan of Eddie the music that Rhoads, and subsequently Jake, composed for Ozzy was far cooler, deeper, and far more mature than what the band Van Halen produced.
I agree completely ! When it comes to technical precision and quality of hitting every single note clearly with complete perfection Randy Rhoads was above all others by leaps and bounds .while other players would lay down a solo for a song they wanted in a recording studio . the engineer then punch in or dubbed that recorded first take to add thickness to the track .where as Randy would play the solos 3 times consecutively (3 separate times) and punch them in one on top of the other for a triple tracked solo with each take was played with the same exact speed and as hit every single note precisely and perfection .that's something that set Randy apart from his contemporaries .Max Norman the engineer who produced those 2 Ozzy studio albums said he had never seen anything like it and hasn't to this day .Rhoads deep knowledge and dedication of the guitar was second to none .
Hi Ben, glad to see you! Well of course Ritchie did solos with the tremolo bar but in this video, did you notice he tapped with his middle finger? When he was reforming Deep Purple, he said he admired AC/DC and Van Halen. So i think he tried to do something as amazing as Eruption, but realised that he can't, so he got mad and wanted to break his guitar. By the way, Ritchie got that stuff from Jimi Hendrix. So Jimi was the first!
@@karsguitarchannel6088 I think the Highway Star solo was the bridge between Hendrix and Eddie, Blackmore seemed to combine Page's Communication Breakdown with Hendrix style tremolo. Unprecedented
Ritchie Blackmore could never handle the six string as good as Eddie. There is a video of Ritchie trying to play a solo with his right hand covering the fretboard, and his left hand trying to play something that was so bad that I had to click off the video. Incoherent music is not what people want to hear. Stick with what you're good at, and try new techniques on your own time if you haven't figured it out yet.
THANKS SO MUCH,..for these clips.....Eddie,...SOUNDS...like EDDIE,.....& RANDY RHOADS SOUNDS like RANDY RHOADS....no matter what anyone says.....you can HEAR IT..!!!
I agree with Brian May that Hendrix & EVH changed how everyone else played the guitar. Those two will ALWAYS be the GOLD standard of rock n roll guitar. Miss you much EVH.
I disagree. Van Halen influenced a lot of rock players. I never heard of a blues, jazz, classical etc player changing their guitar style because of him, but l know many musicians (not just guitar players) changed because of Jimi.
Thank you so much. I hadn't seen this video before of Eddie playing Eruption. So amazing how good he was right from the start and he stayed flawless his whole life.
Ah come on. Even my bass player could play Eruption. And that was when we were all beginning. Thats circus tricks. Music is not: hey look at me how good I am. One trick pony.
I love EVH and Randy. If I had to choose just one album between the two of them it would be the Diary album. Randy's playing on that album is second to none. Also, props to Bob Daisley' contribution. Up yours Sharon!!
I’ve always said : “there’s honestly and truly no comparison between the 2 Randy and Eddie. They were both masters of their domains”. Through the studies that I’ve read,, Randy did feel a little threatened by the “finger tapping” of Eddie. He always felt that’s what the people wanted to hear. But remember Randy was the first to bring classical into hard rock.” They’re BOTH legends and had an honest respect for each other. Please stop trying to compare them. I dare say there’s not a person on this thread that can sound like either one of those 2 exactly. . Thank You all!! Keep Rockin!!
Obviously randy had less time here, but it’s not like Eddie “took time” to achieve his status. It was instantaneous upon the release of VH1. Maybe randy just needed more time. Cuz Ed’s better
Eddie is absolutely glorious, i wish I could've seen him live back in the 80s.. The closest i got to watch a guitar legend was Iommi during the Mob Rules tour
@4runit654 Eddie was classically trained on the piano. However, what Eddie is "known for" is primarily blues pentatonic scales. His Frankenstrat added another piece to his legacy.
100 years later VH will be recognized about his abilities and 2-3 songs while Ritchie will be admired for his feeling in his guitar playing and for more than 100 songs.Yes i know everybody will be singing eruption and noone will know Soldier Of Fortune!
Max Norman (who worked with Ozzy on their debut album 'Blizzard of Ozz') said Randy told him this: "Van Halen was one of the few guitarists Randy would talk about. One day I asked him, 'What guitar players do you like, Randy?' And he said, 'I like Eddie Van Halen.' And Randy said obnoxious things about Eddie just because he tried to imitate Eddie on stage but he didn't want to be considered as Eddie's clone and he definitily wanted to seperate himself from the Eddie comparisons (live). Randy tried to compete with Eddie and there was a professional rivalry thing going on but later Randy admitted that he liked Eddie's playing and was influenced by him. Ask George Lynch. "We were all just trying to cop Eddie." This is George Lynch's quote: "We were jealous and we were all trying to play catch up. We thought, 'Oh boy, we better get on board. This guy's going to change the world.'
George speaks on behalf of people now? He and Randy were acquaintances, him projecting is amusing because Xciter clearly tried to sound like Ed. Randy never did. George does not speak on behalf of Randy, the family does though and friend of his, and they would have a different viewpoint counter to George's
I love RItchie AND Eddie. To be honest, Ritchie was more inspired by Hendrix with his whammy bar stuff. Ritchie has been doing these kind of pyrotechnics with the bar and feedback since his first run with Deep Purple (68-75) And here is a quote from Eddie Van Halen in Rolling Stone from 2011 : "Ritchie Blackmore I liked because of his vibrato bar use on ‘Deep Purple in Rock’ (1970). Also, they come out with great riffs. I mean, come on, “Smoke on the Water” is one for the history books.”
Randy was more schooled at music than Eddie. Yeah they were competitors but Randy's approach was based more off of music theory while Eddie had the most outrageous ear known to man.
Bullshit. Randy was not influenced whatsoever by Eddie and there was never any rivalry between them personally. The fans started the " Eddie or Randy " comparison. Randy learned and taught guitar at his mother's Musonia school. He never spoke badly about Eddie but the same can't be said for Eddie. He berated Randy saying he learned everything from him etc.
Saw Van Halen at Market Square Arena (Indianapolis, IN) when they were touring the 1984 album. They were freakin' AWESOME!!! They ALL 4 did solos, but by far, Eddie's was the best!! A Legend is in Heaven, but we still have his music and videos!
...Say whatever about Ritchie's perfomance....He's still one of the true PIONEERS!!! RIP master Eddie...Always is my heart Good job as usual pal!! Greetings🍻🎸
Hi Bruno, great to see you! Big thanks!!! Yes Blackmore is a pioneer but after Eruption even Ritchie got the bug and tried to imitate EVH. And that came out really terrible lol. As you may notice, Ritchie tried to tap which he hadn't done before. In a 1984's interview with Kerrang, Ritchie said: "I think Van Halen are interesting; I don't particularly like them as a band, but there is a lot of movement, a lot of colour to the material they produce." And so in 1985, he tried to imitate Eddie on stage.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 Ritchie been ripping since 69. whammy action all over deep purple in rock. rb witnessed harvey mandel finger tapping in 68 with Jim Morrison and jimi Hendrix. Mandel, Boston guitarist on 1st lp 76, rick derringer Danny Johnson were ripping before evh and on vinyl. evh was first to use variac. everything else had been done before. half of van halen songs have stolen riffs.. ritchie was a influence on hendrix ad jeff beck for being the first one to play a crazy sounding solo in 1964 on the outlaws shake with me. ruclips.net/video/yRhnZjg6cr4/видео.html . do more thorough research kar.
I think Randy was more talented but Ed had the more pronounced influence as a rock guitarist and had a much longer career. Angus was going to maximize his skills....Blackmore influenced Ed and randy
All four players actually had their own impact, with AC/DC actually impacting VH songwriting...but EVH's techniques spilled over into the other 3 players...not vice versa. Ed impacted nearly everyone...and was really only most influenced by Holdsworth at that time.
@bokohara no it wasn't. What teen has sounded like what he got on Blizzard of ozz, a lot of people can not figure out how he got that tone. No one has ever sounded like Randy on those two albums, lots of people have sounded like Ed.
All great his tone and the way he heard it in his head and to put into a certain way and to be able to make it sounded in his head is so wonderful for all of us
Frankly, Richie's performance out-energizes and outclasses Eddie's here. No joke. I think Blackmore was one of the best, if not THE best guitarist I've heard. Especially in rock and metal. I'm a big fan of Steve Vai as well, but Richie was just superhuman.
we should all step back from the fan discourse, and take a realistic view and realize how lucky we were to have grown up in an ERA with these legends and great players/musicians
@@aparajitroy629 What planet are you on? Randy wasn't even on the same level as even Michael Schenker, let alone Eddie. Randy's tone was harsh and his playing sloppy in comparison to many.
@@aparajitroy629 Not trying to start an internet argument over an opinion. The facts are though that all the greats agree that Eddie is/was king. Even RR was flattered to have been compared to Eddie. I personally don't even put RR in the top 10, and certainly not in the top 1-5. I'm an accomplished player myself, and playing an EVH song requires greater skill than a RR song. EVH also wrote far more 'great/good' songs that had legendary riffs and godlike tones. RR wouldn't have done nearly as well without the Ozzy fame. The songs and riffs weren't as high quality or consistent compared to EVH.
Much as I loved Eddy, Randy was a musician playing his heart out on every song from the start........ One could almost say they belonged in different genres. Eddy did not go lyrical until his 5150.....that was magic too. In any case they all brought us something too precious. God bless them all! God bless you all, too! 🍀🍀🍀
amazing rivals with Eddie predating RR and both in the LA music scene he surely influenced him. Myself I much prefer RR IMO he did more in his 2 albums with ozzy than Eddie did in his career. EVH was great but too a certain degree as David Lee Roth once said his "solos all sound the same". While this rivalry was gearing up in LA the greatest, IMO, guitar player of that era was coming up in Texas, SRV
@@tonylucas66 ok if you want to get your panties in a bunch and split hairs EVH predated him in terms of hitting the big time and becoming star musician. The quiet riot debut may have been released about the same time but it did not propel QR to the top the way Van Halen 1 did for Van Halen. Randy didn't hit that level till Blizzard of Oz several years later. That said I much much prefer RR to EVH hands down. RR made more great music in 2 albums than EVH did in a lifetime. As for quiet riot they never really hit big till several years after RR death.
@@wildwillie5408 what matters is that you claim that Eddie Van Halen is the inspiration to getting Randy Rhoads to where he was as a player, which is patently false. They were contemporaries, and Randy already formed the basis of his playing style before he was even exposed to Eddie Van Halen
Eddie had one thing over all others. That was his ability to write music. There are hundreds of amazing technical guitar solos out there. But not a single one has even reached a 10th of the commercial success of eruption. Eddie made technical playing appealing to the masses.
Eddie couldn't write music, much less read it. He could never compose anything like "Diary of a Madman" or any of Randy's solos. Randy was actually a composer and his solos were carefully thought out, not just guitar wanking.
Eddie Van Halen is the greatest guitar player ever, but guitar players like Angus Young, Ritchie Blackmore, and Randy Rhoads had their own unique style. All of them created some amazing music that will stand the test of time. In my opinion we will never see new guitar players that will inspire millions to pick of the electric guitar like these guys did. I am so glad that I got grow up back then and witness all their brilliance.
@@sedlyf9251 Jason Becker and Randy Rhodes, the rest are for the deaf, particularly Jimmy Page who is a shockingly bad player that I'm convinced is only enjoyed by people who have never held an instrument in their life. He's also a creep.
Randy Rhoads solo's were compositions, short musical pieces in themselves. A fierce and tactical musical technician. Imagine the band those in heaven get to listen to.
you are correct they were songs onto themselves, he simply knew more than the other guys and how to write melodic solos. Sometimes you hear Ed play a solo and not sure it necessarily fits with the song...but he did a lot of great solos too
Randy Rhoads definitely have Eddie a run for his money back in the day! There's still no clear winner when it comes to it tho... both truly 2 icons that the world lost way too soon and will miss.
i don't think Ed was inspired by blackmore, there were many guitar heroes in the early 70's but ed came up with his own way. But if we really want to find the first one, maybe you forgot him . he inspired all who came even before Ed ruclips.net/video/sjzZh6-h9fM/видео.html
@@bartrobinson2103 huh.... but the truth is that he invented that ballpark. Hendrix's tone isn't much different from the others after (blackmore etc etc... up to van halen too) Then everyone added something personal but the first idea of roaring marshall comes from there...
Yes true, when Eddie was a kid, Ritchie was one of his favorite players but after Eruption, even Ritchie got the bug and tried to imitate Eddie. In a 1984's interview with Kerrang, Ritchie said: I think Van Halen are interesting; I don't particularly like them as a band, but there is a lot of movement, a lot of colour to the material they produce.
Each of these guitarists are absolute legends. Did EVH bring something to the table? Absolutely! Was he influenced by Blackmore? Certainly. Pretty much everyone was in that era. Eddie didn’t invent playing fast. He didn’t invent hammer-ons and he didn’t technically invent two hand tapping. He did write some crazy good songs though.
I honestly think Randy wasn't a poser. He played classical guitar, and implemented way more of that into his playing than Eddie Van Halen ever did. He just picked up a few mannerisms of EVH since it took over the world of guitar so dang fast.
I love Angus, Randy, EVH ! I can't pick a favorite. I liked Randy's little medley here. I instantly recognize each of these players at the first few notes. I admit EVH was arguably the most talented of the bunch.
EVH is number one because of his legacy: reworking the mechanics of the actual guitar & writing memorable classic songs that filled entire albums with unique & irreplaceable music :
the VH songs today sound very dated. Silly, goofy party songs.... Rhoads wrote compositions about serious topics....sound like they were released yesterday..
This clip really doesn't do Blackmore justice. This section is taken out of his "usual" improvisational performance, especially at the end of long space truckin' jams that lead to the regrettable but high-profile destruction of beautiful guitars (best examples: California Jam) or later during extended solo spots in "Difficult to Cure". If you want to hear something EVH-esque from Blackmore, I recommend the two guitar soli in "Hardlovin' Man" on the groundbreaking "In Rock" album or his (especially at that time) insanely fast low-gain solo in "Wring that neck", live in Bilzen, 1969, starting at about 1:35min in the video you can find here on RUclips.
I’m not sure why Blackmore is being criticized by some. Ritchie literally pioneered the neoclassical subgenre by merging classical guitar melodies, harmonic minor scales, Phrygian dominant scales, Diminished Seventh arpeggios and diminished scales with hard rock. Deep Purple’s Concerto for Group and Orchestra, being most groundbreaking. But Rainbow too featured neoclassical influences...way before Randy. So a little respect is deserving.
Well most of Ritchie's solos (if not all) were blues based. The only guitar solo that sounded classical was the one to "Burn". And Stargazer was influenced by Jimmy Page's Kashmir. Ricthie admitted that in interviews. I believe that Yngwie Malmsteen is the real neoclassical player.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 No doubt, Yngwie would become synonymous with the neoclassical genre. But just watch DP’s Concerto for Group and Orchestra, to see why Blackmore is well-known as a pioneer of the neoclassical style. Heavily influenced by Bach, Mozart and others, Blackmore utilized, for ex., diminished sevenths to help develop the style. There’s a reason why Yngwie was a huge fan of Blackmore.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 Another example, The song “Gates of Babylon” is a great example of the phrygian dominant scale. The lick has a very exotic, Middle Eastern sound to it, and happens at the 3:05 mark in the track. Ritchie uses the E Phrygian Dominant scale, played over (mostly) an E pedal tone in the bass.
@@automatoncollectives7237 I just watched it and honestly I don't hear any classical influences (Bach or Mozart) in Ritchie's soloing. On the other hand, I hear some jazz influences. I know that Django Reinhardt was one of Ritchie's early influences and Ritchie used it in Deep Purple's first three records but when he did In Rock, he was heavily influenced by Hendrix. I actually like very much his early jazzy solos.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 What did you watch? Gates of Babylon? If so, the solo reeks of Borodin or Rimsky-Korsakov... two of my favourite Russian composers.
I dunno wtf was up with Blackmore there... It almost seems like he's making fun of EVH, like as if so say 'everything Eddie plays is bullshit to me'. Also, Randy wasn't copying EVH at all at that point, he's doing all his own stuff. And when he used tapping later on in his career, he put his own spin on it and used it in a different way than EVH did. RIP RR and EVH
Back then even Ritchie Blackmore got the bug and tried to imitate Eddie Van Halen. As you may notice, Ritchie tried to tap which he hadn't done before. In a 1984's interview with Kerrang, Ritchie said: I think Van Halen are interesting; I don't particularly like them as a band, but there is a lot of movement, a lot of colour to the material they produce. And of course Randy is one of the greatest innovators of heavy metal guitar but he developed his style later in Ozzy's band. Eddie Van Halen was the first who set everyone on fire. Eddie was one of Randy Rhoads' favorites and in 1979 Randy tried to sound like Eddie Van Halen. And Randy admitted that later (And George Lynch confirmed that too). Randy said that he was influenced by Eddie Van Halen.
Hey guys, I trimmed out the Blackmore solo part because it was too long. Please check out the Blackmore part here - ruclips.net/video/BIOeFTBQPHk/видео.html 🎸🎸🎸!!!
Thank you ☝🙂
Very cool friend
Thank you guys, you are very welcome!
True, but these guys didn’t play like this before
Ummm no. That’s not Ritchie trying to do Eddie. Blackmore had plenty of moments that were clearly inspirational to Eddie, if not blueprint for him. The YFNO solo from Live in London, the feedback segment on Space Truckin’ from Made In Japan…. no, Blackmore is doing Blackmore there. That this moment is not the best he’s ever done, well…. it goes that way sometimes when you take a real risk improvising every night you take the stage.
In retro, one can clearly see where Eruption would not even exist if it weren’t for Ritchie getting up in front of 300,000 people at CalJam and setting the mold.
The greatest thing about this video is getting to see rare footage of Randy... Playing like Randy
Haha! Exactly.
It’s too bad Randy said himself that he finds himself playing Van Halen all the time. And wishes he could have found his own style of playing. This is out of the horses mouth.
@@SMARTS_YT 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@SMARTS_YT pulling out of the horses mouth so to speak, tell it like he really said it, its flash and copy licks for his solo piece! not anything musical or songwriting wise.
you are welcome.
@SMARTS_YT Hey, you ever hear of that riff from a little song called crazy train? You know, that one that plays at EVERY sporting event? That one song that didn't have a vaudeville hack squeaking over it every damn second they could????
Eddie was genius, sure, but if you are going to come on forums and not respect or hear the genius in Randy Rhoads, you might not want to work an iron when it's hot or pick up a pot from a hot flame, cause you are clearly lacking common sense and will defintly hurt yourself walking around without that level of intelligence.
Lol
Randy had a completely different attack I loved. Nobody is trying to be either one. Both are legendary.
Eddie was a goofball. 🙄
A goofball who I believe is the best guitarist ever!
@@davereich2728
Nobody cares.
But Eddie did Panama or jump. Stack that up to Crazy Train alone and randy wins hands down as the lasting legend. Evh always was the typist with no soul
@@kevinumber7troll boy
Love them all, but Randy's solos on Blizzard of Oz and Diary of a Madman, we're as close to perfection as I ever heard.
WELL SAID
Loved Randy, but his rhythm playing wasn't as epic as Ed's
Fucking rights 🤘🤘
@@MRCATL3really?
@@MRCATL3 It was easily every bit as good, his rhythm was excellent...
The Gem in here is the Randy video!! I’ve never seen this so rare. You can see just how different of a player he is. He’s another level he was so fluid in his runs. Truly a master already and so young here! Badassery!
That isn’t Randy. That’s Eddie. Look at the guitar. It’s his white striped guitar. Idk why everyone thinks it’s randy
@@moltenhavoc3736did you watch the video at all??????
@@moltenhavoc3736The one before Eddie is Randy Rhoads, the creator of the video trimmed out Ritchie
@@moltenhavoc3736 There are 5 different videos in this clip...they are individually labeled...
Last 3 are Eddie...the 1st 2 are Angus & then Randy.
Big clue...if it's wearing polka dots it's most likely Randy...that was his signature outfit.
I met Eddie in 1991 and he was in rehab at Saint Joe’s. Hung out with him a few times in meetings. Smoked a few cigarettes with him in the back. Give him a book when he got his 30 day chip. He remembered me. When I was at a meeting, he walked up and said hey Steve, how are you. I couldn’t believe it. I guess it was my 15 minutes. I wish I could’ve helped him stay sober. He finally got sober for Wolfie. I miss you my friend. Thanks for the memory.
Wasn’t that the same yr Wolfie was born…
I wondering if he might have been doing out pt therapy .. I only say this because Valerie has made no mention that Ed went into therapy that yr because Ed was the one who would get up through the night with Wolfie to feed and change him..
Always a sad thing to see amazing talent destroying themselves with addiction. Fortunately there are some who keep coming back
@@timeddy5549 That's anyone really.
Doesn't get any cooler than that
lucky man to have met him steve !!!!
Randy was not an imitator, he was a contemporary
I was going to bring that up thanks. Randy and Eddie were in the same circles and both went to craft their own individual sound. They are similar because that’s what was going on at the time.
bullshit, he admitted trying to copy Eddie, yet failed lol
He did get very frustrated when he first heard Eddie. Said by his girlfriend at the time
@@edward9884 he also admitted in an interview it bothered him that he does a lot of what Eddie does, because that's what the kids (fans) like. He said he wanted to come up with something more original but it was gonna take time. He finished by saying "Eddie is great though, I don't want to be near competing with someone like that"
Randy's take is awesome
Randy played like Randy and copied no one. He is a legend that can't be replaced or copied in a true form.
I heard that Randy never stopped taking lessons even when on tour and already a rock god. So the opposite - guitarists are in awe of his humility and willingness to learn. It's a big lesson / example.
In contrast... there is a video around on YT where George Harrison actually says [paraphrased] "I could have been quite good but Ringo and I didn't practice that much between Tours and records".
BS buddy go listen to his horrible eruption version on the live tribute album its sickening and a complete joke..
Just like Eddie
Sounds like the angry voice of someone who can’t play what Randy wrote and can’t tell what he’s hearing enough to know the difference.
😂
Eddie's feel is what made him the player he was. Lots of players have technique, but you ain't got a thing if you ain't got that swing.
Time/feel is everything.
That's the benenfit of grrowing up with one of the best drummers on the planet. Elite timing.
I think it’s pronounced “swang.”
And the way he played skipping strings at an insane pace. He did some crazy stuff on guitar.Go learn the riff to hot for teacher and play UT like evh did.
Yeah, he sounded like he was playing to a drummer in his head even when his brother wasn’t playing. The way he would speed up and slow down like it was all rehearsed, effortless and smooth.
Randy had absolutely crisp notes at massive speeds, he is unlike any guitar player. Combine this with a vast knowledge of music theory, his compositions were unique.
Only through Ozzy's guidance. Quiet Riot sucked. They were flops until they capitalized on Randy's name. Who knows the next lps he made could have flopped? He was far from done. I thought Jake E Lee was a better player, and is under rated. He had to play clone riffs for Ozzy and managed to squeeze him self in there. Absolute professional. Eddie was the first "mainstream" shredder. Based his riffs an awful lot on Jimmy Pages stuff. Most of the greatest are someone else on steroids. They take other ideas to extremes. Imo
@@andrewruiz7894 I'm a great fan of Jake E Lee, but he is different to Randy and had the opportunity to build on what Randy achieved. No one beats Randy when it comes to innovating Rock harmonies (chord progressions) at his time, revelation mother earth, suicide solution, believer. These are not standard 1-4-5 progressions. They are entirely different, that's why they sound different. He grew up in a music school and could take classical harmonies and translate them to heavy rock. Ozzy, even if sober, would not of had a clue, much like the rest of us!!! This is a guy who at the height of success was set on dropping rock and doing a Degree in music!!! No one does that.
Randy’s solos were compositions themselves.
@@stevejohnston8543 Of course. Major compositions!!! Perfectly played, .... like a guitar teacher would play them to his student!!!!
I guess you never heard of Al Di Meola in the seventies. Pull him up on RUclips between 1976Race with Devil on Spanish Highway live you’ll see him playing a sunburst Les Paul it’s about 9:20 long Wanna talk about clarity.
Eddie sounded natural. Like a drunk rolling down the stairs and then rolling into a standing position and shouting ”ta-da”. He managed to connect all the clever techniques together in a fluid natural sounding way.
Beautiful disaster
Killer analogy
He called it "falling down the stairs and landing on your feet".
@@mojodojo5533 that's what was said actually about Page
He got a lot from Jimi Hendrix and Jimmy Page. He took it further into his own, but a lot of his moves and locks are straight out of the Jimi and Jimmys playbooks.
I can't imagine what would be Randy Rhoads in our days... Simply AMAZING
I think he just died too early. Had still a lot to give. Yep.
But pretending 40 years of continuous artistic mastery is a huge stretch. These guys weren't fucking invincible!!
from what i have read / heard he was going to give up playing with ozzy and concentrate on the classic side / teaching. definatly died way to young tho :(
I love how Randy still sounded completely unique. I wish we could've seen what it would've looked like between him and Eddie had he lived. The eighties would've been even crazier.
I saw VH on their World Invasion ('Women & Children First") tour at Hammersmith Odeon in 1980, & Blizzard Of Oz at Port Vale football ground, 1981 - both EVH & Rhoads had their own unique styles, so to make comparison, is futile. For my money, Rhoads had the edge - but that's a personal opinion.
Mad respect to EVH - one of a kind virtuoso with his own unique Frankenstein of a style.
But - I also hear and see a 22/23 year old Randy Rhoads with a style and brilliant creativity all his own.
THANK YOU, and RIP to both. ❤️
Angus was playing that at least as early as 1977 (a year before VH1) as part of the Let There Be Rock solo. He definitely wasn't influenced by Eddie. Facts.
Thank you!
No way, 100%
Indeed. It's the other way around. Eddie was a great admirer of Angus. You can hear this clearly in his way of playing, he just made it his own by using a lot more finger tapping and of course the whammy bar. Eddy never made a secret of that either. He loved AC/DC!
You guys are all wrong. Angus is next to Brian Johnson in that clip, who joined the band after Bon Scott died in 1980. Eddie Van Halen's eruption came out in 1978 and it's not a coincidence that Angus is playing many of the same notes as Eruption in the clip. Angus was indeed (just for fun obviously), doing an Eddie Van Halen impression in that video.
@@rasheedali77 You guys are all wrong. Angus is next to Brian Johnson in that clip, who joined the band after Bon Scott died in 1980. Eddie Van Halen's eruption came out in 1978 and it's not a coincidence that Angus is playing many of the same notes as Eruption in the clip. Angus was indeed (just for fun obviously), doing an Eddie Van Halen impression in that video.
When Van Halen came out back in the day I bought the album. Learned how to play Eruption but also learned I was no Eddie Van Halen. Same thing Randy Rhodes, SRV, and so many others. One day I had an epiphany. Just play your own music, be a musician and entertain. “If I can’t be my own I’d be better dead.” Layne Staley
Yes. I love Eddie Van Halen's sound. For me, he was the best, but best is in the ear of the hearer, we all aren't going to like the same things. Just because EVH appeals to me more, doesn't mean I don't recognize other great guitarists and don't thoroughly enjoy what others CREATED. Just be you and write good music that you enjoy playing.
well, Ritchie really pioneered the arpeggiated runs on highway star in 1973. Also he used whammy bar extensively (after Hendrix of course).
EVH took it all to new heights
@@chickentwisties2298 he absolutely did. no one artist helped ton sell more guitars than Hendrix EVH and Cobain
Uli Roth also used classical arpeggios and modes in his solos, but that was in 1975/76/77, so Blackmore was first. And Jan Akkerman from Focus also used similar guitar techniques.
@@AndyNyleHendrix, Cobain taught everyone to play and smash, burn their guitars. EVH taught everyone to play and rebuild their own customized guitars😂 I liked all of them.
@@markusantonio4866 it’s harder to break something that you build. But I am sure Eddy smashed plenty of guitars in private when they were not up to his standards
One major difference is just how much classical influence Randy had. It is very noticeable when you listen to his solos.
This has nothing to do with that. The example here sounded like a wannabe EVH and not much else.
@@asegal4677 Except Eddie stole fast blues licks from Clapton and 2 hand tapping from an Italian Classical Guitarist....so I guess Eddie was a wannabe as well?
@@algrundau9441 Granted that nobody is devoid of influences, however Eddie doesn't sound like either Clapton or some Italian classical guitarist. By contrast, Randy here sounds like Eddie. Eddie has a distinctive style, both easily recognizable and extremely influential at that time -- so this seems not to be a fluke; it's likely just a copy and an inferior one.
Comparing Eddie to Clapton is like comparing a mercedes to a bicycle@@algrundau9441
@@asegal4677 Oh bullshit, I bet you hardly know how to play an instrument and couldn't explain one thing either guitarist is doing...
Am I the only one that didn't see Ritchie???? Was looking forward to it but . . . Great performers none the less! Hats off to obtaining this treasure of truly priceless footage. ROCK ON!!!
Thanks Joe for checking out, great pleasure! I had to trim out that Blackmore part. Please check out the link in my comment below the video. The thing is that even Blackmore got influenced after Eruption. This is why he dropped his Ranbow project and reformed Deep Purple in 1984. In his 1984's interviews, Blackmore says that he admires AC/DC and Van Halen.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 Rename the video then.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 He dropped Rainbow and reformed Deep Purple because they offered him a massive wad of cash and he had to fund his divorce.
Ritchie could be amazing live and also could be completely awful live (mostly in the 80s), never matching EVH's accuracy. But he was first with a lot of this stuff.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 scammer
When EVH appeared on the scene, it was an EXPLOSION across the 🌎🤟🔥🔥🔥
Crazy to think Hendrix was only 8 years behind Eddie. Eddie was an instant time machine into the space age.
Hendrix died in 1970, Eddie was 15 in 1970, Van Halen formed in 1973. It took them 5 years to get signed. All the stuff on the first two albums was already writen and and being performed by release of the first album. So close as almost contemporary. But for the fact Jimi would never get the chance to hear Eddie.
Behind? I think you mean ahead since Jimi came first.
@@obiwan5999 Chronologically, Jimi is behind. On a timeline, he would be put behind EVH.
Probably you don't know Uli Jon Roth and Michael Schenker existed before him
@@justarandomguy2126
I did actually, I opened up for Michael Shankar in 08 with one of my bands in fact!
I just remember as a 14 year old in 1981 walking around town (Lodi Nj) with my buddy it seemed like every other garage or basement had a band. Including ours. Being a guitar player the conversation between guitar players was Eddie or Randy. It's a shame we only had 2 years of that magical moment. I was a Randy guy but don't deny Eddie's innovative everything. Randy just clicked with me more
it is basically a coin toss and personal preference, but the issue is EVH apologists seem to need to let everyone know how Ed invented everything......it's weird.
The two guys grew up in the same area of LA, knew each other, but neither sounded like the other. George Lynch was also part of the holy trinity of LA guitar players, but he definitely tried to sound like Ed with the first Xciter album
Randy was great but with all due respect Eddie with his rhythms leads songwriting sound innovation and Stage presence is Miles Ahead
@@jmm1817 Plus synth and piano. He wrote stuff no one ever even heard or sounded like before. We take it for granted now but all of those little easter eggs he did on every album. Usually one instrumental masterpiece per album for most of his career. Even now i remember vividly as a little kid that 1984 album. It was groundbreaking synth stuff never heard before or since. He wasn't just a great guitar player he could play every instrument. One of the greatest musicians of all time for sure. He wrote so many hit songs.
@@jmm1817you smoke crack often?😅😂
@@judyteague4212 never and why would you say that if you don't agree that Eddie Van Halen was Miles Ahead of Randy you are the Clueless one puffing on the pipe
Blackmore recorded Black Night with an underrated solo . It happened before VH. Greatings.
Yes amazing solo, love it
RITCHIE BLACKMORE non c'è perché LUI è di un altro pianeta!!!!!💥💥💥💣
Dajè. Ne parliamo tra qualche anno (se tutto va bene).
Randy was freaking amazing and had his unique style that influenced me to play guitar in 1984.
Ed's guitar riffs and rhythm work is what I admired about him the most. After he changed electric guitar as we knew it in the 70s, so many others came and ran off with it. Ed stayed in VH and wrote monster rock songs which still stand up. All of Randy's work on those Ozzy albums too. Timeless both of them!
I agree, I think his rhythm work gets overlooked sometimes. Light up the sky is a perfect example. Simple but brilliant.
Concur they were both different but their work will stand the test of time. Never forgotten.
Sails of Charon was released in 1977, that one changed guitar as we knew it in those very same years!
All are fantastic.
But Blackmore has always been my personal favourite.
🎼🎶🎸
No one is even close to him , he's only "problem" is lack of popularity . 😊 And there's evidential proof to that - DP, Rainbow and all the great musicians he found, build and set free to stardome
Ritchie has played some of the most beautiful guitar solos in history and written some of the most unique songs. That's the essence of being a musician.
Not the tappings and the whammy bars and whatever. Maybe EVH should have tried to play like Blackmore, which I am pretty sure that he tried when he started learning...
They all played a mean guitar, but Eddie was a mad scientist that played a mean guitar. RIP Eddie and Randy. I hope you're both jamming with Jimi and Bon
EVH changed the landscape of electric guitar for everyone. You can hear it in the tone alone...it was a gold standard other contemporary players reached for, along with his techniques....
his brown sound of course is legendary, he changed the game but the others guys all have their place with Ed.
@@Dave_Wight_The_Rock_Oracle the other three are absolutely virtuosos and contributed to electric guitar.
@@Dave_Wight_The_Rock_Oracle You are a toy collector, please refrain from posting your illiteracy.
The only hired gun, on paid contract, with no contractual recourse is Randy. Randy was a doormat.
@@automatoncollectives7237 does not matter, how is that relevant to his playing or what he wrote. That is just a such weird viewpoint....I would say a band that owes a label 2 million dollars after recording and touring is the epitome of a doormat, and they had no recourse.
You realize you are insulting Van halen far worse with your angle? they were millions in debt that is a horrible situation to be in.
And you are actually wrong as a hired hand, Randy was offered a management fee schedule as a band member. Randy was clearly cop-joined with ozzy as the guys in the band at the time of his death,.
Love Eddie, but before there was Eddie, there was Ritchie. Blackmore was soooo innovative and a master in his own right.👍🎸🇺🇸❤️
Yeah I think he was definitely the forerunner to shred
Easily a top 10 guitarist
Nah before Eddie we had Rory Gallagher
@@maxmunzert9725 The greatest
Beck was the leader.....
Apples and oranges, but each one brought something different, that touched us all
apples and oranges are fruits so they can be compared and contrasted....all ofthese guys can be compared to each other
@@Dave_Wight_The_Rock_Oracle wrong, each one is original, and brilliant in their own way, but no one is above the others, BTW, A$sh#le blow me
@Archangel0804 no one said two guitarists are the same, they absolutely can be compared they play guitar. Any two people can be compared and contrasted.
I know Darth hideous fumbled with no video footage or being ready to ball by August 1981, she should have pro footage or videos taken to promote Diary of a madman.
@Dave Wight Dave....As a player of over 30 years, you are dead wrong. No two guitarists are ever the same, and therefore shouldn't be compared in the manner presented here. OF COURSE EVH is the master of HIS OWN LICK.... I would expect that!! All of these guitarists are awesome in their own way. Everyone develops their own style, and every player is the sum of their influences with some amount of deviation.
If someone gave Randy some good film footage of Eddie playing Eruption way back in the late 70's and early 80's, I guarantee Randy could play it EXACTLY.
Randy was a FAR better player than I am, yet I can play Eruption just as well as Wolfgang VanHalen who pretty much has mastered his father's rendition. It's less difficult than it looks. For that matter, There are freaking 10 and 12 yr olds here on RUclips that can play Eruption pretty well!
ruclips.net/video/kcfqZphAMYw/видео.html
People forget that Randy died in March of 1982. RUclips didn't exist, and MTV was just getting started. So that left you with a concert to view a performance and no one had a cell phone to record the performance either. There also wasn't exactly any readily available film to study of someone else's work. And that was the case here.
Exactly. All innovated theyre own thing. Definitely not trying to be like eachother.
It's so great when video like this surfaces and we get a glimpse of these guys in their prime. And what a shame that nobody thought to film every show. Thank you whoever posted this!!
I will say it a million times, and mean it everytime Being a guitarist myself, I know what EVH was to me. Everyone else here knows what he meant to them. You can throw out all the superlatives you want about The Master, but there is never going to be an argument about his mastery of his chosen art. No else had players around the planet going "What the F is that". From his grin to his fingers Eddie was born to bring us joy through his expression of his art, and you can thank whatever god you believe in that he shared his joy with us.
ALWAYS #1
UNPARALLELED.
When the master emerged, from the opening chords of you really got me, every player knew the sonic landscape was changed in a way that was unheard of up to that time. Eruption smashed his foot onto your throat daring you to try to emulate him. No one can. do you know why? You cant be Eddie because you don't think like Eddie.
There was never anyone like him, and there will never be another.
Rhoads was on that level, he just did not live as long
Beyond Eruption, Meanstreet intro tops anything ever done on a guitar up to that point, PERIOD. His tone was chased by all ...
Agree evh is my all time biggest influence and favorite guitarist but to say that no other guitar player had other guitar players around the world going what is that sells Hendrix's influence short. Cuz he def had that impact as well. Whether you like him or not.
Eddie wondered wtf jeff beck was doing. He's even said so. He was like a star struck kid in Jeffs presence. Eddie was brilliant and sure lit it up for a few years. Beck is the goat
@@waitwhat9689 agreed. Even if you just stopped at tone, no one else could touch EVH...but when you add Eruption, Spanish Fly, Women in Love, Cathedral, Mean Street and essentially designing the modern Superstrat...EVH was the major game-changer for everyone in that period and after.
C'mon man, Randy Rhoads always played like that. He really didn't copy Eddie at all. And he really had a desire to be a classical guitarist as well.
if anything Randy was inspired by former Bowie guitarist Mick Ronson, not Eddie.
Glen Buxton from Alice Cooper, the original band. Mountain Guitarist Leslie West was the other. I would say West was probably the most influential of the three on Randy's playing. I never really got people saying EVH was. Apparently, the two didn't care much for one another with Eddie's photo apparently taped onto Randy's effects pedal. 🤣
No need to say it. If randy lived long enough he wouldve out did eddie.
Finger tapping was huge in the 80s because of EVH.
Lots of players did it. That dude from Night Ranger did it with 8 fingers which was mind blowing at the time for us young guitar players.
Randy actually did a lot of that stuff before Eddie did eruption
Randy is truly impressive in this clip. While Eddie's tapping was instantly a thing then, Randy was seriously into classical guitar music and his soling lines amply reflect that. Hats off to both Edward and Randy. Rock got a swift kick in the nuts when it needed one. Regarding Ritchie, he was a pioneer in heavy rock. He made a lot of noise in Made In Japan but man it was such amazing noise. The clip shown here is also noise making but he must be taking the piss. AC/DC is simply great. As for Edward, he's the Mozart of 20th century rock guitar.
ya but Randy had been doing that solo for years.... Randy was a more diverse player. But the real issue is Randy never cited Ed as a favorite that is a lie or ignorance.
@@Dave_Wight_The_Rock_Oracle Sorry Dave, not true. Max Norman (who worked with Ozzy on their first album) said Randy told him this: "Van Halen was one of the few guitarists Randy would talk about. One day I asked him, 'What guitar players do you like, Randy?' And he said, 'I like Eddie Van Halen.' I had never seen Eddie play, so when Randy started doing all that finger tapping stuff, it was all new to me. But Randy didn't cop Eddie's licks, he just picked up on some of his ideas and methods of playing. It's only natural to get something from someone else - all guitarists do it."
@@Dave_Wight_The_Rock_Oracle Rudy Sarzo"Later on he came to really admire Gary Moore and Eddie Van Halen. Those were his top two guys."
@@karsguitarchannel6088 Find me the interview if you are pulling quotes from message boards, many of those are made up, they want to see what suckers they can find.
Spot on
Randy was so amazing. He's my direct inspiration for why i play. The outro solo to Mr Crowley did it for me.
Eddie and Randy both came up together in the same area and music scene.
They influenced each other and pushed one another into immortality...
Randy once came up to Eddie and admitted that he stole a lot of his stuff. Eddie, like the gentleman he was, said "thanks" and that was it.
I appreciate them both for what they gave. Eddie was about 5 yrs Randy's senior, in the guitar playing world. He still rained Supreme in record sales and I'm sure still does.
Umm Eddie was one year older then Randy.
@@aaronlarsen7447
Eddie is Eddie & Randy is Randy
Both are legendary guitarists
Both have their own way of tunes
RR was influenced my EVH but he had his own thing going. Especially in his writing style. He was a pioneer and one of the best.
He did take the Van Halen influence and use it to fuel his own composing and playing and forge a cool style....
Randy Rhoads was a contemporary of Eddie van Halen and what's more they were both from LA so they influenced each other. Both stellar but these days I'm more drawn to RR, his playing had more finessse and subtle nuances not to mention his humbleness and shyness was very reminiscent of Hendrix.
Also Randy Rhoads was voted best guitar of the year I think in 1981 during the height of Eddie Van Halen career
@@kevinstewart1898 Randy won MTV's Best New Talent in 1981. I believe he may have won the same sort of award for best new talent for Guitar World, but i could be mistaken.
First of ALL, RR started playing guitar LOOOONG before he heard Eddie play. RR already had the musical genius in him by then!
Picking the best guitar player is in the eye of the beholder. They are all unique and have their own styles.
0:37 Randy Rhodes playing like Randy Rhodes...
Yeah, that’s an insult… Randy was his own person.
Eddie was years before him.
I say this with massive respect for EVH: Randy’s speed and precision are on a different level. Had his life not been cut short, and he continued with the same intensity and desire to learn, …. What could he have been?
…and how far would he have pushed Eddie
@@charlesdjones1 that is, ultimately, my humble yet subjective opinion. I know I am in the minority here. Lol. I have listened to both - and many others - closely for many years. I can’t explain it, but there is some element of Randy’s playing that grabs my soul. Interestingly, I find that Eddie’s son strikes me in a similar manner. But happy to cling to the contrarian view…
Though I'm a big fan of Eddie the music that Rhoads, and subsequently Jake, composed for Ozzy was far cooler, deeper, and far more mature than what the band Van Halen produced.
EVH was way smoother and had way better tone. Rhoads was choppy and his tone was abrasive. I didn't like it.
I agree completely ! When it comes to technical precision and quality of hitting every single note clearly with complete perfection Randy Rhoads was above all others by leaps and bounds .while other players would lay down a solo for a song they wanted in a recording studio . the engineer then punch in or dubbed that recorded first take to add thickness to the track .where as Randy would play the solos 3 times consecutively (3 separate times) and punch them in one on top of the other for a triple tracked solo with each take was played with the same exact speed and as hit every single note precisely and perfection .that's something that set Randy apart from his contemporaries .Max Norman the engineer who produced those 2 Ozzy studio albums said he had never seen anything like it and hasn't to this day .Rhoads deep knowledge and dedication of the guitar was second to none .
Listen to Ritchie 1969 - 1973 and we understand....he was the first 🔥🎸🙏🏼
Hi Ben, glad to see you! Well of course Ritchie did solos with the tremolo bar but in this video, did you notice he tapped with his middle finger? When he was reforming Deep Purple, he said he admired AC/DC and Van Halen. So i think he tried to do something as amazing as Eruption, but realised that he can't, so he got mad and wanted to break his guitar. By the way, Ritchie got that stuff from Jimi Hendrix. So Jimi was the first!
I agree. .. Ritchie was the first.. everyone after him kinda overplays..
.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 I think the Highway Star solo was the bridge between Hendrix and Eddie, Blackmore seemed to combine Page's Communication Breakdown with Hendrix style tremolo. Unprecedented
Richie en Made in Japan, ese el Richie de verdad ninguno de los que salen superarán eso
Ritchie Blackmore could never handle the six string as good as Eddie. There is a video of Ritchie trying to play a solo with his right hand covering the fretboard, and his left hand trying to play something that was so bad that I had to click off the video. Incoherent music is not what people want to hear. Stick with what you're good at, and try new techniques on your own time if you haven't figured it out yet.
THANKS SO MUCH,..for these clips.....Eddie,...SOUNDS...like EDDIE,.....& RANDY RHOADS SOUNDS like RANDY RHOADS....no matter what anyone says.....you can HEAR IT..!!!
Thanks for posting footage of Randy. The true GOAT.
Agree
😅😅
I agree with Brian May that Hendrix & EVH changed how everyone else played the guitar. Those two will ALWAYS be the GOLD standard of rock n roll guitar. Miss you much EVH.
I disagree. Van Halen influenced a lot of rock players. I never heard of a blues, jazz, classical etc player changing their guitar style because of him, but l know many musicians (not just guitar players) changed because of Jimi.
For me it is Hendrix then Van Halen then Yngwie Malmsteen, the 3 guys changed the game. There was a before and after to them.
...and Malmsteen, too. It was the 3 pillars.
EM we can agree to disagree but I have Brian May on my side. Game, set, match!
Give me Dave Gilmour and Brian May over Hendrix and Van Halen. I'm a mood and melody guy more than how many notes per second can be played.
Thank you so much. I hadn't seen this video before of Eddie playing Eruption. So amazing how good he was right from the start and he stayed flawless his whole life.
Ah come on. Even my bass player could play Eruption. And that was when we were all beginning. Thats circus tricks. Music is not: hey look at me how good I am. One trick pony.
@@ulrichprieser6698 🤦♂️
I love EVH and Randy. If I had to choose just one album between the two of them it would be the Diary album. Randy's playing on that album is second to none. Also, props to Bob Daisley' contribution. Up yours Sharon!!
I’ve always said : “there’s honestly and truly no comparison between the 2 Randy and Eddie. They were both masters of their domains”.
Through the studies that I’ve read,, Randy did feel a little threatened by the “finger tapping” of Eddie. He always felt that’s what the people wanted to hear. But remember Randy was the first to bring classical into hard rock.”
They’re BOTH legends and had an honest respect for each other. Please stop trying to compare them.
I dare say there’s not a person on this thread that can sound like either one of those 2 exactly. .
Thank You all!! Keep Rockin!!
You never heard of Uli Roth I guess. Listen to scorpions sails of charon. Rhoads was by far not the 1st one to do classical in metal.
Yngwie was the progenitor of neoclassical guitar !
@@RichardNixon-y3o And Blackmore before that.
Uli Jon Roth and Blackmore did that first, then Randy, then Yngwie essentially made neoclassical an actual genera in the early 80s
Ulrich Jon Roth came before Randy so your statement is false
All of them are great guitarist!! They have given us so much outstanding music to last us a couple lifetimes!!
I saw Randy in 1982. He was incredible. Randy and Eddie were great guitarists, Eddie just had more time to prove his talents.
Where did you see Randy back then?
i have always thought this....if rhoads had the same time as eddie...i think its obvious who would be king!
Obviously randy had less time here, but it’s not like Eddie “took time” to achieve his status. It was instantaneous upon the release of VH1. Maybe randy just needed more time. Cuz Ed’s better
Eddie was pretty Basic
@@McWizard420 Randy was great but Eddie was only a year older and had Eruption and Spanish Fly at '79 . . . 3 years before Randy's death
Eddie is absolutely glorious, i wish I could've seen him live back in the 80s.. The closest i got to watch a guitar legend was Iommi during the Mob Rules tour
Randy had classical influence, Eddie was blues.
Randy brought modal scales into the light.
Eddie was pentatonic scale driven.
They are both great.
No match to EVH !!!!
@emmaalbano1680 nope, Randy could play. And is evenly matched comparing apples and oranges...
I can't speak on Randy but you couldn't be more wrong about Edward, he was playing classical on the fretboard
@4runit654 Eddie was classically trained on the piano. However, what Eddie is "known for" is primarily blues pentatonic scales. His Frankenstrat added another piece to his legacy.
Eddie was blues and funk
Cool video Kar!! Eddie has influenced me big time.
Hi Shawn, great to see you! Have an awesome rocking day!
I see eddie 3 times in concert. The man was like a Ferrari, fast clean and he roared like a lion. He gave you your money's worth.
Ditto! 👍
100 years later VH will be recognized about his abilities and 2-3 songs while Ritchie will be admired for his feeling in his guitar playing and for more than 100 songs.Yes i know everybody will be singing eruption and noone will know Soldier Of Fortune!
Max Norman (who worked with Ozzy on their debut album 'Blizzard of Ozz') said Randy told him this: "Van Halen was one of the few guitarists Randy would talk about. One day I asked him, 'What guitar players do you like, Randy?' And he said, 'I like Eddie Van Halen.' And Randy said obnoxious things about Eddie just because he tried to imitate Eddie on stage but he didn't want to be considered as Eddie's clone and he definitily wanted to seperate himself from the Eddie comparisons (live). Randy tried to compete with Eddie and there was a professional rivalry thing going on but later Randy admitted that he liked Eddie's playing and was influenced by him. Ask George Lynch. "We were all just trying to cop Eddie." This is George Lynch's quote: "We were jealous and we were all trying to play catch up. We thought, 'Oh boy, we better get on board. This guy's going to change the world.'
George speaks on behalf of people now? He and Randy were acquaintances, him projecting is amusing because Xciter clearly tried to sound like Ed.
Randy never did. George does not speak on behalf of Randy, the family does though and friend of his, and they would have a different viewpoint counter to George's
I love RItchie AND Eddie. To be honest, Ritchie was more inspired by Hendrix with his whammy bar stuff. Ritchie has been doing these kind of pyrotechnics with the bar and feedback since his first run with Deep Purple (68-75) And here is a quote from Eddie Van Halen in Rolling Stone from 2011 : "Ritchie Blackmore I liked because of his vibrato bar use on ‘Deep Purple in Rock’ (1970). Also, they come out with great riffs. I mean, come on, “Smoke on the Water” is one for the history books.”
I particularly like Ritchie's playing on the early Deep Purple song "Painter".
Randy was more schooled at music than Eddie. Yeah they were competitors but Randy's approach was based more off of music theory while Eddie had the most outrageous ear known to man.
Bullshit. Randy was not influenced whatsoever by Eddie and there was never any rivalry between them personally. The fans started the " Eddie or Randy " comparison. Randy learned and taught guitar at his mother's Musonia school. He never spoke badly about Eddie but the same can't be said for Eddie. He berated Randy saying he learned everything from him etc.
Angus is in a league of his own as well
Saw Van Halen at Market Square Arena (Indianapolis, IN) when they were touring the 1984 album. They were freakin' AWESOME!!! They ALL 4 did solos, but by far, Eddie's was the best!! A Legend is in Heaven, but we still have his music and videos!
...Say whatever about Ritchie's perfomance....He's still one of the true PIONEERS!!!
RIP master Eddie...Always is my heart
Good job as usual pal!! Greetings🍻🎸
Hi Bruno, great to see you! Big thanks!!! Yes Blackmore is a pioneer but after Eruption even Ritchie got the bug and tried to imitate EVH. And that came out really terrible lol. As you may notice, Ritchie tried to tap which he hadn't done before. In a 1984's interview with Kerrang, Ritchie said: "I think Van Halen are interesting; I don't particularly like them as a band, but there is a lot of movement, a lot of colour to the material they produce." And so in 1985, he tried to imitate Eddie on stage.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 Ritchie been ripping since 69. whammy action all over deep purple in rock. rb witnessed harvey mandel finger tapping in 68 with Jim Morrison and jimi Hendrix. Mandel, Boston guitarist on 1st lp 76, rick derringer Danny Johnson were ripping before evh and on vinyl. evh was first to use variac. everything else had been done before. half of van halen songs have stolen riffs.. ritchie was a influence on hendrix ad jeff beck for being the first one to play a crazy sounding solo in 1964 on the outlaws shake with me. ruclips.net/video/yRhnZjg6cr4/видео.html . do more thorough research kar.
Ritchie is an all time legend, and he influenced Ed too as Ed has said
He’s awful.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 no I don't think so at all. I've seen him probably 9 times .
I'll take Eddie with Randy close behind him. Blackmore and Angus are great at their own things.
I think Randy was more talented but Ed had the more pronounced influence as a rock guitarist and had a much longer career.
Angus was going to maximize his skills....Blackmore influenced Ed and randy
All four players actually had their own impact, with AC/DC actually impacting VH songwriting...but EVH's techniques spilled over into the other 3 players...not vice versa. Ed impacted nearly everyone...and was really only most influenced by Holdsworth at that time.
Ed s tone was miles ahead of Randy's, randy sounds like when some average teenager is shredding on guitar..
@@bokohara620 I liked Randy's tone for what it was at times...but it needed some work, and was nowhere near EVH. No one was...
@bokohara no it wasn't. What teen has sounded like what he got on Blizzard of ozz, a lot of people can not figure out how he got that tone. No one has ever sounded like Randy on those two albums, lots of people have sounded like Ed.
Saw Eddie in 79, 80. Best live guitarist I ever saw.
Saw VH in 79 in a 3000 seat venue in Caldwell Idaho. I was 18
I love Randy and Eddie both, and the variety among masters benefits all.
Man his left arm was strong as hell With all his symmetrical runs and stretches . Super human playing . RIP sir
Blackmore is the best 👌
All great his tone and the way he heard it in his head and to put into a certain way and to be able to make it sounded in his head is so wonderful for all of us
Frankly, Richie's performance out-energizes and outclasses Eddie's here. No joke. I think Blackmore was one of the best, if not THE best guitarist I've heard. Especially in rock and metal. I'm a big fan of Steve Vai as well, but Richie was just superhuman.
I consider myself blessed to have lived during the life and times of each of these masters. They were and will always be the best at what they do/did.
we should all step back from the fan discourse, and take a realistic view and realize how lucky we were to have grown up in an ERA with these legends and great players/musicians
Ritchie Blackmore is the best of all of them. His catalogue and techniques are unparalleled
Yep.. Followed by late Rory Gallagher and Hendrix
Jeff Beck was better.
😂😂😂
Um ok?!! LMAO!!
@@yeolderooster8050try listening to some of his shit. I can clearly tell you haven't
Randy Rhoads didn't have to "try" to play like anyone. He was already the best of the best.
Can't even imagine what he'd be like today.
Randy was easily bested by EVH and many other contemporaries of his time. Randy was great, not the best of the best though.
@@eulldog No he wasn't. Randy was far superior to Eddie.
@@aparajitroy629 What planet are you on? Randy wasn't even on the same level as even Michael Schenker, let alone Eddie.
Randy's tone was harsh and his playing sloppy in comparison to many.
@@eulldog No it wasn't, looks like you're drinking way too much of the Eddie kool aid.
@@aparajitroy629 Not trying to start an internet argument over an opinion.
The facts are though that all the greats agree that Eddie is/was king. Even RR was flattered to have been compared to Eddie.
I personally don't even put RR in the top 10, and certainly not in the top 1-5.
I'm an accomplished player myself, and playing an EVH song requires greater skill than a RR song.
EVH also wrote far more 'great/good' songs that had legendary riffs and godlike tones.
RR wouldn't have done nearly as well without the Ozzy fame. The songs and riffs weren't as high quality or consistent compared to EVH.
Much as I loved Eddy, Randy was a musician playing his heart out on every song from the start........
One could almost say they belonged in different genres. Eddy did not go lyrical until his 5150.....that was magic too. In any case they all brought us something too precious. God bless them all! God bless you all, too! 🍀🍀🍀
Randy and Eddie were rivals...Both were amazing guitarists 🎸 !!!
amazing rivals with Eddie predating RR and both in the LA music scene he surely influenced him. Myself I much prefer RR IMO he did more in his 2 albums with ozzy than Eddie did in his career. EVH was great but too a certain degree as David Lee Roth once said his "solos all sound the same". While this rivalry was gearing up in LA the greatest, IMO, guitar player of that era was coming up in Texas, SRV
@@wildwillie5408 I was definitely in on the Texas Flood and I agree 👍
@@wildwillie5408 Quiet Riot's debut album came out in 1978. Van Halen's debut album came out in 1978. How exactly did Eddie predate Randy?
@@tonylucas66 ok if you want to get your panties in a bunch and split hairs EVH predated him in terms of hitting the big time and becoming star musician. The quiet riot debut may have been released about the same time but it did not propel QR to the top the way Van Halen 1 did for Van Halen. Randy didn't hit that level till Blizzard of Oz several years later. That said I much much prefer RR to EVH hands down. RR made more great music in 2 albums than EVH did in a lifetime. As for quiet riot they never really hit big till several years after RR death.
@@wildwillie5408 what matters is that you claim that Eddie Van Halen is the inspiration to getting Randy Rhoads to where he was as a player, which is patently false. They were contemporaries, and Randy already formed the basis of his playing style before he was even exposed to Eddie Van Halen
Eddie had one thing over all others. That was his ability to write music. There are hundreds of amazing technical guitar solos out there. But not a single one has even reached a 10th of the commercial success of eruption. Eddie made technical playing appealing to the masses.
His composing and songwriting were game-changing.
And every note is brilliant in Van Halen
Plus his rhythm was cooler than anyone else’s
My sentiments exactly.. well said
Eddie couldn't write music, much less read it. He could never compose anything like "Diary of a Madman" or any of Randy's solos. Randy was actually a composer and his solos were carefully thought out, not just guitar wanking.
Eddie Van Halen is the greatest guitar player ever, but guitar players like Angus Young, Ritchie Blackmore, and Randy Rhoads had their own unique style. All of them created some amazing music that will stand the test of time. In my opinion we will never see new guitar players that will inspire millions to pick of the electric guitar like these guys did. I am so glad that I got grow up back then and witness all their brilliance.
Umm, no he wasn't. He was one of the greatest. Let's not forget Mr. Anthony Frank Iommi, who is the # 1.
@@MasterSumaiprince was phenomenal
Jimmy Page,Blackmore,Randy rhoads,mark Knopfler
@@sedlyf9251 Jason Becker and Randy Rhodes, the rest are for the deaf, particularly Jimmy Page who is a shockingly bad player that I'm convinced is only enjoyed by people who have never held an instrument in their life. He's also a creep.
I learned eruption in an afternoon. Hes not "the greatest."
Only a year after Randy Rhoad’s death, Yngwie came around with that Steeler album and totally topped the game. He was so far ahead.
Eddie Miss him everyday! Our Hero!!!
Rhoads our hero too
I’ve also missed Eddie since his passing. The world just don’t seem the same without him 🥺😢
@@edward9884I can't believe it has been 2 and one half years
Randy Rhoads solo's were compositions, short musical pieces in themselves. A fierce and tactical musical technician. Imagine the band those in heaven get to listen to.
you are correct they were songs onto themselves, he simply knew more than the other guys and how to write melodic solos. Sometimes you hear Ed play a solo and not sure it necessarily fits with the song...but he did a lot of great solos too
Eruption is a genius composition! Eddie changed the world and set everyone on fire!
Writing melodic solos, Randy got that from Gary Moore. Randy liked Gary's style.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 Between Eruption, Spanish Fly, Women in Love Cathedral and Mean Street, EVH changed the game for everyone.
If you've not heard Spanish Fly......Eddie never claimed to invent anything. He was also a classically trained pianist
Doesn’t really matter…all legends of the six string! 🎸🤘
Thanks for the one and only RR!!!
00:10 Brian Johnson with the Flamengo shirt
Curioso, não ?
@@leobatista2472 curioso pq?
@@laylavitoria29 acredito que qualquer um esperaria um time britânico ou no máximo, a seleção brasileira, mas nunca o Flamengo
@@leobatista2472 Flamengo é o maior time do mundo amigo
@@laylavitoria29kkkk acorda alice
Randy Rhoads definitely have Eddie a run for his money back in the day!
There's still no clear winner when it comes to it tho... both truly 2 icons that the world lost way too soon and will miss.
2:44 this is evh 😐
Nobody! Absolutely Nobody can or ever will top Eddie! Just the best and thats that!!
With all due respect, EVH got his inspiration from Ritchie in the 70s
i don't think Ed was inspired by blackmore, there were many guitar heroes in the early 70's but ed came up with his own way. But if we really want to find the first one, maybe you forgot him . he inspired all who came even before Ed ruclips.net/video/sjzZh6-h9fM/видео.html
@@albecenex4890 you are 100% spot on correct Hendrix was the master in a ballpark of his own
@@bartrobinson2103 huh.... but the truth is that he invented that ballpark. Hendrix's tone isn't much different from the others after (blackmore etc etc... up to van halen too) Then everyone added something personal but the first idea of roaring marshall comes from there...
Richie , iommi, gibbons , Hendrix , may , McCarty, Clapton , page , plus others influenced Eddie.
Yes true, when Eddie was a kid, Ritchie was one of his favorite players but after Eruption, even Ritchie got the bug and tried to imitate Eddie. In a 1984's interview with Kerrang, Ritchie said: I think Van Halen are interesting; I don't particularly like them as a band, but there is a lot of movement, a lot of colour to the material they produce.
Each of these guitarists are absolute legends. Did EVH bring something to the table? Absolutely! Was he influenced by Blackmore? Certainly. Pretty much everyone was in that era.
Eddie didn’t invent playing fast. He didn’t invent hammer-ons and he didn’t technically invent two hand tapping. He did write some crazy good songs though.
I honestly think Randy wasn't a poser. He played classical guitar, and implemented way more of that into his playing than Eddie Van Halen ever did. He just picked up a few mannerisms of EVH since it took over the world of guitar so dang fast.
Randy was undoubtedly a MASTER!
Randy was good but not a master.
Check ur ears bro@@herbcanter2114
Angus was taking the piss as they say. He didn't have many kind words to say about Ed back then in an interview.
he considered van halen a pop rock band but he clearly came to respect him.....a lot of rivalry early on, but as guys matured they got it
I love Angus, Randy, EVH ! I can't pick a favorite. I liked Randy's little medley here. I instantly recognize each of these players at the first few notes. I admit EVH was arguably the most talented of the bunch.
EVH is number one because of his legacy: reworking the mechanics of the actual guitar & writing memorable classic songs that filled entire albums with unique & irreplaceable music :
Exactly 💯
💯
That's funny! Hendrix already reworked the mechanics of the guitar before we ever heard pf EVH.
@@danfranks8093 Hendrix didn't come close to EVHs tone, groove, to say nothing of tapping, tapped harmonics, volume swell fx, etc
the VH songs today sound very dated. Silly, goofy party songs.... Rhoads wrote compositions about serious topics....sound like they were released yesterday..
With a Flamengo jersey at the thumbnail, of course you got my like.
I thinked i was The only One who percepted this
Eddie..... The King❤❤
Angus young and Eddie are the goats I like angus a bit more though and he is my favorite guitarist of all time.
Yes Angus is really good. His playing is always tasty
This clip really doesn't do Blackmore justice. This section is taken out of his "usual" improvisational performance, especially at the end of long space truckin' jams that lead to the regrettable but high-profile destruction of beautiful guitars (best examples: California Jam) or later during extended solo spots in "Difficult to Cure". If you want to hear something EVH-esque from Blackmore, I recommend the two guitar soli in "Hardlovin' Man" on the groundbreaking "In Rock" album or his (especially at that time) insanely fast low-gain solo in "Wring that neck", live in Bilzen, 1969, starting at about 1:35min in the video you can find here on RUclips.
which means that Blackmore influenced EVH.
@@michaelkarlsson5966 exactly
No, I think he was frustrated that he can't play anaything as amazing as Eruption, so he got mad and wanted to break his guitar.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 The solo to Gates of Babylon or Kill the King is more amazing let alone Lazy.
O Manto do Flamengo ❤
Hell yeah Randy was brilliant! But he couldn't build a guitar like Ed could! 😊. Nobody could! RIP Mr Ed! You were one of a kind my friend! Day! ♥️🍺😎🇺🇲
I’m not sure why Blackmore is being criticized by some. Ritchie literally pioneered the neoclassical subgenre by merging classical guitar melodies, harmonic minor scales, Phrygian dominant scales, Diminished Seventh arpeggios and diminished scales with hard rock. Deep Purple’s Concerto for Group and Orchestra, being most groundbreaking. But Rainbow too featured neoclassical influences...way before Randy. So a little respect is deserving.
Well most of Ritchie's solos (if not all) were blues based. The only guitar solo that sounded classical was the one to "Burn". And Stargazer was influenced by Jimmy Page's Kashmir. Ricthie admitted that in interviews. I believe that Yngwie Malmsteen is the real neoclassical player.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 No doubt, Yngwie would become synonymous with the neoclassical genre. But just watch DP’s Concerto for Group and Orchestra, to see why Blackmore is well-known as a pioneer of the neoclassical style. Heavily influenced by Bach, Mozart and others, Blackmore utilized, for ex., diminished sevenths to help develop the style.
There’s a reason why Yngwie was a huge fan of Blackmore.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 Another example, The song “Gates of Babylon” is a great example of the phrygian dominant scale. The lick has a very exotic, Middle Eastern sound to it, and happens at the 3:05 mark in the track. Ritchie uses the E Phrygian Dominant scale, played over (mostly) an E pedal tone in the bass.
@@automatoncollectives7237 I just watched it and honestly I don't hear any classical influences (Bach or Mozart) in Ritchie's soloing. On the other hand, I hear some jazz influences. I know that Django Reinhardt was one of Ritchie's early influences and Ritchie used it in Deep Purple's first three records but when he did In Rock, he was heavily influenced by Hendrix. I actually like very much his early jazzy solos.
@@karsguitarchannel6088 What did you watch? Gates of Babylon? If so, the solo reeks of Borodin or Rimsky-Korsakov... two of my favourite Russian composers.
I dunno wtf was up with Blackmore there... It almost seems like he's making fun of EVH, like as if so say 'everything Eddie plays is bullshit to me'. Also, Randy wasn't copying EVH at all at that point, he's doing all his own stuff. And when he used tapping later on in his career, he put his own spin on it and used it in a different way than EVH did. RIP RR and EVH
That's some of the worst stuff I've ever seen from Blackmore pathetic indeed
@@bartrobinson2103 yes I agree, Ritchie's great but that was one his worst live performances
Back then even Ritchie Blackmore got the bug and tried to imitate Eddie Van Halen. As you may notice, Ritchie tried to tap which he hadn't done before. In a 1984's interview with Kerrang, Ritchie said: I think Van Halen are interesting; I don't particularly like them as a band, but there is a lot of movement, a lot of colour to the material they produce. And of course Randy is one of the greatest innovators of heavy metal guitar but he developed his style later in Ozzy's band. Eddie Van Halen was the first who set everyone on fire. Eddie was one of Randy Rhoads' favorites and in 1979 Randy tried to sound like Eddie Van Halen. And Randy admitted that later (And George Lynch confirmed that too). Randy said that he was influenced by Eddie Van Halen.
Excelentísimo vídeo gracias por subirlo👍👍👍👍👍